the rise and fall of imperial japan. (by ka). the pacific ocean

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The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA)

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Page 1: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA)

Page 2: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

The Pacific Ocean.

Page 3: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

The Japanese Empire.

• Japan had a severe lack of natural resources.

• Nearby Manchuria had plenty of coal, plus industries and ports.

• China had already been carved up by the Western powers. Why shouldn’t Japan do the same?

• 1910 Japan moved into Korea.

Page 4: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

The Japanese army conquer German Tsingtao 1914

• Japan astutely joined Britain and France for WW1 and took over German Chinese possessions as soon as she could.

• In 1915 Japan presented China with the 21 Demands, taking even more power from China, and indirectly depriving China of her best leader Yuan Shikai.

• After WW1 Japan was not asked to return any Chinese land, despite China supporting the British and French in the war. This caused the May 4 riots in China 1919.

Page 5: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

The local Chinese warlord.

• Zhang Zuolin was the Chinese warlord of Manchuria 1928.

• He began to show sympathy for Chiang Kaishek and the new China

• The Japanese army planted a bomb in his private train and killed him.

Page 6: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

The Manchurian Incident 1931• The Japanese army saw conquest as a way

out of this.• The army was also afraid of Chiang

Kaishek’s moves to unify China. They thought he would take Manchuria from them.

• Claiming Chinese sabotage of a railway, the Japanese army occupied Manchuria. They renamed it Manchukuo and put the deposed Chinese Emperor Pu Yi up as a figure head.

• This was the run-up to the Sino-Japanese war 1937-45

Page 7: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

Japanese tanks of the Kwantung Army in Manchuria

Page 8: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

Gradual Japanese advances.

• The Japanese army gradually crept Southward, through China, fighting all the way.

Page 9: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

Japanese soldiers ‘conquer’ the Great Wall 1933

Page 10: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

• 1937 the Japanese army clashed with the Chinese at the gates of Beijing (the Marco Polo Bridge).

• This photo is just after the fighting had finished, leaving the Japanese in control.

Page 11: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

Japanese occupation of China.• By 1938 There were 1 million Japanese troops in

China.• By 1941 2 million troops- but this was still not

enough. • Japan could occupy only key areas and cities. • Out of fear they adopted The ‘Three All Campaign’

(‘Kill all, burn all, destroy all’)• Japan simply didn’t have enough soldiers

however.• By 1945, 4 million Chinese people had died and

60 million had been displaced.• Many Chinese cities lay in ruins.

Page 12: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

A baby caught up in the bombing of a Shanghai railway station

Page 13: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

A Japanese tank in the streets of Shanghai.

Page 14: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

Japanese troops at Nanking - The Rape of Nanking

Page 15: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

In six to eight weeks they killed over 300,000 people.

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Women were targeted. They were abused and raped. In fact, this even is not

known as the massacre of Nanking…

Page 17: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

It is known as the Rape of Nanking—

because the city and its

women were literally “taken”

and abused terribly.

Page 18: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

Japanese soldiers sent home pictures of their atrocities. They did this to “show off” or “brag.”

Therefore, we do have many pictures about what happened.

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•Japanese soldiers themselves photographed and documented the brutal raping of thousands of Chinese women, the bayoneting of infants for sport, and the rampant slaughter of the population.• After 18 days, an estimated 300,000 people had been murdered. •As a placard at the Nanjing Massacre Memorial Hall simply states, "The Chinese people suffered greatly."

Page 20: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

2nd Sino-Japanese War

• Beijing and other northern cities as well as the capital, Nanjing, fell to the Japanese in 1937.

• Japanese troops killed tens of thousands of captured soldiers and civilians in Nanjing.

• Forced to retreat westward, Jiang Jieshi set up a new capital at Chongqing.

• Chinese guerrillas led by China’s Communist leader, Mao Zedong, continued to fight the Japanese in the conquered area.

Page 21: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

The Japanese army rapidly advanced through China, Indo-China, Malaya, and Indonesia.

- Some Asian people welcome them as liberators from western Imperialists

- Soon they were generally feared as new imperialists, not as Asian liberators

• They treated non-Japanese peoples with ruthlessness, cruelty and severity.

Page 22: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

Great cruelty.

Page 23: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

Imperial Japanese expansion up to 1941

(in brown)

Page 24: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

Aggressors on the March

• The League of Nations failure to stop the Japanese encouraged European Fascists to plan aggression of their own. The Italian leader Mussolini dreamed of building a colonial empire in Africa like those of Britain and France.

Page 25: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

Japanese things that were potential war winners.

Page 26: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

The ‘zero’ fighter plane.

• Much faster and more maneuverable than any other fighter at the time.

Page 27: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean
Page 28: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

The two biggest battleships ever!

Page 29: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean
Page 30: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean
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The aircraft carrier.

• Only a few people realized that old battleships were finally made obsolete by the aeroplane.

• Pacific naval wars were to be decided by planes from ships, not by big guns.

Page 32: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

The bicycle!

• NB This is an actual Japanese army bike.

The army could move very quickly through the region whether or not roads were ‘good

Page 33: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

Soldiers.

• Soldiers, highly skilled in attack, defence, and jungle warfare.

• Highly motivated to defend their Emperor and their land to the death.

Page 34: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

• By November 1941 the Japanese were poised to even strike Australia!

• Campaigns to attack Burma and Midway Island were to be a prelude to this.

• The bombing of Darwin was a precursor of invasion.

Page 35: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

.

• The British government- alarmed at the rapid Japanese advance-decided to send some big warships to show strength.

• They ignored the advice of the navy that already knew that aeroplanes could now sink ships easily.

• Both ships were sunk by over 100 Japanese planes.

• It was a major blow to Britain. Another pointer to the new nature of naval warfare.

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The Prince of Wales ,and the Repulse- both sunk Dec 1941.

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Page 38: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

The Japanese capture Hong Kong.24.12.1941

Page 39: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

Pearl Harbour (Hawaii)

The major fleet base of the US navy in the Pacific. It was home to all the major US warships in the Pacific. Destruction of these ships would take out all the resistance to Japanese expansion to the East and South.

Page 40: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

7th December 1941-the ‘day of infamy’.

The Japanese launch a surprise attack.

The Japanese had been shown how to attack a harbour with planes by the British attack on the Italian fleet in Taranto

11.11.1940. The US navy had chosen to regard the feat as a ‘fluke’.

Page 41: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

• US warships sinking at anchor.

• Japanese carrier planes ready to take off.

Page 42: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

The US fleet lies destroyed.

Page 43: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

Unfortunately the Japanese destroyed battleships, but no US aircraft carriers.

They also failed to either destroy or capture the harbour.

Page 44: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

The USS Enterprise• Only luck kept

this ship out of Pearl Harbour on the 7th. She arrived the following day.

• She was to lead the US Navy back into the fight in the Pacific.

Page 45: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

Singapore surrenders 15.2.1942

General Percival comes out to surrender to the Japanese. It was Britain’s greatest ever military defeat.

Page 46: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

Burma- 1942-3

• Heavy fighting.• The Japanese pushed

out British forces by superior jungle fighting techniques.

• The British reliance on motor vehicles was exploited as a weakness by simple tree-felled road blocks.

• The Japanese prepared to attack India

• The British counter attacked in Arakan but were again beaten

Page 47: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

The infamous Burma railway. This is where the Japanese put civilian

and military prisoners to work in the rain forest. Huge numbers died.

Page 48: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

Burma 1944-5• The British adopted new

techniques. Instead of trying to hold territory generally they made sure of holding well-defended ‘boxes’ of strategically important land.

• The Japanese found themselves unable to defeat their enemy and unable to utilise the land to their advantage. They also now found themselves dependent on hugely long, and very vulnerable, supply routes.

• Battle of the ‘Admin Box’ was a British victory in 1944. The Japanese army had, at last, to retreat.

Page 49: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

The Burma road-a lifeline to China

• Built at huge effort this road was a link between the allies in Burma and China.

• Vast amounts of supplies were trucked over the mountains to help the fight against the Japanese.

Page 50: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

The Rape of Nanking Dec 1942-Feb 1943.

The Japanese army were allowed to run riot.

Up to 300,000 civilian Chinese deaths

• 1,000 rapes a day• Hospital patients tortured.• Soldiers bayonetted and

shot people at will.

Page 51: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

Five Chinese civilians being buried alive.

Page 52: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

• Japanese soldiers use prisoners for bayonet practice.

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Up to May 1942 the Japanese are unstoppable. They possess territory from the border of India to the Soviet Union, and from the Aleutian Islands to nearly

Australia.They have not defeated their

enemies’ forces however.

Page 54: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

The British Army is retraining in jungle warfare.

The USA and Britain join forces.

The US navy is quick to realize the importance of carriers and sets up ‘naval task forces’.

The US marines train to fight in jungles and attack islands.

Page 55: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

Massive American industrial resources are brought against Japan.

Modern business techniques produce huge amounts of warships, guns, planes and everything else.

Modern design technology means that Japanese know-how was rapidly outstripped.

Both Britain and the US send war material to help Chiang Kaishek fight the Japanese in China.

Page 56: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

• US aid to China included these Curtis fighter planes, the ‘Flying Tigers’

• They actually had shark mouths painted on because it was thought the Japanese were afraid of sharks!

Page 57: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

Fantastic industrial output allows the US to pour new ships into the

Pacific.

Page 58: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

Midway Island. May 1942

US aircraft carriers outclass the Japanese carriers and catch them off guard.The Japanese navy loses 4 of it precious aircraft carriers in this one battle. Japan cannot replace the loss quickly- unlike the US. It is the turning point of the war.

A Japanese carrier on fire and sinking.

Page 59: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

The Japanese Shinano.-to make up for losses, the Japanese built the world’s largest aircraft carrier. Due to bombing it had to put to sea whilst still

unfinished, and with workers onboard still building it!-it was sunk by a US submarine shortly afterwards, still

incomplete.

Page 60: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

Mighty Japanese battleships are pounded to pieces by US carrier

planes. They are obsolete.

Page 61: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

The USS IOWA.

Battleships found a new role in bombarding

Japanese held island defences.

Page 62: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

Tarawa atoll.

• Despite battleships the Japanese were masters of defence.

• US marine casualties were horrendous at every island attacked.

• Japanese defenders inevitably fought to the death.

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Iwo Jima

• The island where the film ‘flags of our fathers’ was set.

• Horrendous casualties on both sides

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A US carrier sinks.

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• Carrier battles were fierce.• Japanese islands acted as permanent aircraft carriers• If you crashed in the Pacific you were unlikely to be found / rescued.

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Kamikaze.

• Kamikaze- ‘Divine Wind’.

• It became obvious that the US possessed more and better war technology

• In desperation Japan ordered her young men to beat the enemy by flying bombs into the enemy (and dying in the process)

• These suicide bombers flew planes, or manned suicide torpedoes.

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The US carrier St.Lo, attacked and sunk by Kamikaze.

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A ‘Kaiten’-or suicide torpedo.

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US ships ablaze after kamikaze attacks

Page 73: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

• Another Kamikase hit on a US carrier.

• A US sailor commented ‘the fight might be tough on land, but you can’t dig foxholes in the sea’!

• What do you think he meant?

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• Another US ship in flames.

• But replacements were already on there way.

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• US anti-aircraft fire became monstrous.• Kamikase attacks occurred all day and all night.• Nerves were worn to shreds as combatants

were unable to rest.

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Attacking Okinawa island.

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Okinawa Island - May 1945

• This island is within bomber range of Japan. If it falls Japan will, at last, be vulnerable.

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Kamikase attacks reach their peak.

• Even the Yamato battleship is sent on a suicide mission (and is sunk)

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Civilians caught up in the fighting

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A US soldier uses a flamethrower A US tank lies upsidedown after being blown up

Page 81: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

The ‘Ohka’

This is an unused Japanese suicide rocket bomb found on Okinawa. There were no more Japanese planes to launch it.

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• The first Atomic bomb to be used in war… ‘little boy’.

• This bomb was shipped from the US a mere 4 hours after the ‘Trinity’ A-bomb test in the US.

• The actual radioactive material inside was the size of an orange.

The Atomic Bomb

Page 83: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

The USS Indianapolis

• Delivered the first atomic bomb to the US air force in Tinian.• July 30 1945 sunk by Japanese submarine off the Philippines on the way

home.• Because of her ‘special mission’ her journey was ‘secret’.• Of 1200 crew, 900 survived the sinking only to find themselves at sea

with no rescuers even looking for them.• Sharks were quickly attracted and after 4 days only 300 men were left,

mostly terrified out of their minds.• It was the worst US Navy disaster in history.

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The Enola Gay. The US plane chosen to drop the Atomic bomb on Japan.

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Hiroshima- Aug 6 1945

• The effect of ‘little boy’

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Nagasaki Aug 10 1945.

Atomic Bomb number 2.

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This had once been Nagasaki.

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The Soviet Union invades 1945

The Soviet army- having defeated Germany, now came east to share in the kill with the USA.

It invaded Manchukuo and met little resistance from the Kwantung army which was just a skeleton of its former self.

Here are Soviet tanks in the Capital of Manchukuo.

Uncertainty about what was the ‘Chinese’ border will lead to border fighting after the war.

Page 89: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

The Japanese surrender party onboard a US battleship in Tokyo Bay 15.9.1945.They are ‘enduring the unendurable’ at the Emperor’s request. The Emperor finally concedes that Japan cannot face US technology and survive.

Notice the gun crews ready for action on the right. The Americans were still fearful of Kamikazes.

Page 90: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

Over Tokyo Bay.

Page 91: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

VJ Day (Victory over Japan Day)

• The scene in Times Square August 14 1945.

• News has just been released that Japan has formally surrendered.

• World War two has ended. But the Cold War has already begun….

Page 92: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

Japan retreats.

• Japan withdrew all forces from the Pacific and from the mainland.

• So widely scattered were soldiers, and so dedicated were they to their cause, that old soldiers were still coming out of hiding in 1972!

Page 93: The rise and fall of Imperial Japan. (by KA). The Pacific Ocean

The End.

• Japan lost 2.5 million people in the war.• China lost 10 million people.• The Yasukuni shrine is still contentious. Hirohito

refused to visit in his last years due to rumours that it housed Japan’s war criminals. The present day prime Minister still visits.

• The USA rebuilt Japan to enable it to recover as a source of American influence in Asia.

• The Atom bomb was seen as the crucial symbol of political power. The USA was shortly to consider using it again- this time on China.